“Truth Alone Triumphs”: of David, Goliath, Stones, and Speech

“Azadi” is also the chant whose echoes swirl in the Kashmir Valley with greater resonance each day, from the minarets and playgrounds, boulevards and alleys, schools and courts, despite the crushing screeches of teargas and bullets of the Indian (in)security forces. It is “scriptured” into utterance by each breath of Kashmiri women, children, and men; calligraphed by their blood on their emerald valley; embroidered by their bones in Kashmiri Arabesque on worn cobblestones of the downtown; and papier-mâchéd in paisley tears on the blue of their beloved lakes.

And the night’s sun there in Srinagar? Guns shoot stars into the sky, the storm of constellations night after night, the infinite that rages on. It was Id-uz-Zuha: a record of God’s inability, for even He must melt sometimes, to let Ishmael be executed by the hand of his father. Srinagar was under curfew. The identity pass may or may not have helped in the crackdown. Son after son–never to return from the night of torture–was taken away.

… But the reports are true, and without song: mass rapes in the villages, towns left in cinders, neighborhoods torched. “Power is hideous / like a barber’s hands.” The rubble of downtown Srinagar stares at me from the Times.

… And that blesséd word with no meaning–who will utter it? What is it? Will the women pronounce it, as if scripturing the air, for the first time? Or the last?

… What is the blesséd word? Mandelstam gives no clue. One day the Kashmiris will pronounce that word truly for the first time. (Excerpt from Agha Shahid Ali’s “The Blesséd Word: A Prologue,” in The Country Without A Post Office, 1997: 16-17)

Mandelstam might give no clue, but that blesséd word, yet to be “pronounced truly” and freely “for the first time,” is آزادي / Azadi (āzādī). It is an abstract ideal, contraband of the highest degree in the Valley of Kashmir, currently controlled by India. This sonorous word, sweet on the tongue — Azadi — is an Urdu/Koshur word of Farsi origin that means, “freedom; release, deliverance, liberation, discharge; manumission, emancipation; freedom of action, liberty, independence” according to Platts’ Urdu dictionary.

“Azadi” is also the chant whose echoes swirl in the Kashmir Valley with greater resonance each day, from the minarets and playgrounds, boulevards and alleys, schools and courts, despite the crushing screeches of teargas and bullets of the Indian (in)security forces. It is “scriptured” into utterance by each breath of Kashmiri women, children, and men; calligraphed by their blood on their emerald valley; embroidered by their bones in Kashmiri Arabesque on worn cobblestones of the downtown; and papier-mâchéd in paisley tears on the blue of their beloved lakes.

The video above — put together by an unknown young person and set to the Everlast song, “Stone in My Hand” — is a short montage documenting the current popular protests in Kashmir Valley against the Indian occupation. The video above has prompted the Indian Security Forces to “launch a manhunt” for the filmmaker, such is the state’s fear of freedom of expression. Facebook users from the Valley are under the Indian government’s surveillance and the Police has cited many and threatened even more users with imprisonment for uploading images and videos documenting the ongoing protests. Short Messaging Service or SMS has been aborted in the Valley – or as the Kashmiris pun it has become “Silenced Messaging Service!” or “Summoned Messages Spammed” or “Satyaanas [annihilated] Messaging Service.” Armed with Frantz Fanon’s writings, Agha Shahid Ali and Faiz Ahmad Faiz’s poetry, and sometimes with stones, the youth of Kashmir update their Facebook status as a means of instantaneous information-sharing, especially when the “[t]he owners of newspapers in Srinagar in Indian-administered Kashmir … suspended production because of curbs imposed by the government,” as reported by BBC. So while “Satyameva jayate” or “Truth alone triumphs” is the national motto of India, and “Truth shall set you free” says the Bible (John 8:32), Wole Soyinka responds, “But first the Truth must be set free.” In Kashmir the current struggle is the struggle not just for Azadi, but also for the freedom of expression to set free a truth long enchained in the Indian state’s double-speak. The seductive, yet exclusive nationalism of Bollywood, subsidies from the Centre that trap the client state in corruption, and the lure of tourism revenues are more than balanced by the ledger of tyranny from TADA, AFSPA, PSA, POTA: a veritable alphabet soup of draconian and undemocratic laws that nourish the Indian occupation of Kashmir.[1]

Stone pelting or ‘kani jung’ is not new to Kashmir. In the 1930s, when Chief Minister Omar Abdullah’s grandfather Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah led a popular resistance against the Dogra rulers of the state, stone pelting was part of that protest.

In the years that followed, stone throwing remained limited to the lanes and bylanes around Srinagar’s Jamia mosque and Maisuma neighbourhood where young boys would throw stones at policemen for a few hours after namaz. In fact, the frequency with which people turned up in Maisuma near Lal Chowk to stone a police post earned it its new name—Kashmir’s Gaza strip.

The discovery in late April, early May 2010 that three innocent civilian Kashmiri villagers — Muhammad Shafi, Shehzad Ahmed and Riyaz Ahmed — had been murdered in cold-blood by the Indian army and police in a staged “encounter,” framed and buried as “Pakistani infiltrators” initially instigated this fresh wave of mass demonstrations, the third in that many consecutive years since 2008.[2] The perpetrators were promised medals, monetary awards, and promotions for this service to the state. To understand the rage that gushed forth at these “fake encounters,” and to avoid its simplistic categorization as the “usual, irrational, fanatic Muslim reaction” naturalized in the current transnational Islamophobic context, it is crucial to realize that these extrajudicial killings and involuntary disappearances have hounded Kashmiri Muslims for more than twenty years, although this history is usually deliberately obfuscated via a cultivated amnesia.[3]

At unarmed protests that followed the recognition of the buried “Pakistanis” as local Kashmiris “disappeared” by the Indian army and Kashmir Police, the Indian security forces fired teargas and bullets and targeted the head of a 17-year-old Pre-Med student, Tufail Ahmad Mattoo, at close range, on June 11, 2010. Not a protester, Mattoo was simply walking back to his home after a tutorial and had had to take refuge in a stadium when the police started firing.[4] (Note that this was not the first such death this year either.) The shocking narrative is further exacerbated by the fact that the Police tried to dodge its culpability, and in spite of eye-witness reports” issued a statement saying the teen had actually been murdered, and pointed a finger of suspicion at the men who had driven him to hospital.” YouTube videos, uploaded by the protesters, immediately disproved these assertions. More protests followed Mattoo’s funeral procession; once again the Indian forces fired bullets and teargassed, killing more young boys. Each round of killing elicits escalating protests, accompanied by stone-pelting and strikes, followed by more state-violence, more funerals, and more and bigger rallies. The youngest victim of the Indian security’s bullets is nine-year-old Tauqeer Ahmad.

To the photograph that accompanied Tariq Ali’s excellent article on Kashmir, “Not Crushed, Merely Ignored,” on PulseMedia on July 18, 2010, I would like to add two more to tell a slightly fuller story. These appeared on a Facebook album with someone’s plea that the story of Kashmiri plight “be shared with the world.”

Indian policemen walk past the bodies of Muzaffar Ahmad Bhat and Fayaz Ahmad Wani (front) as they lie on the road after police stopped the funeral procession of the two in Srinagar July 6, 2010. India placed restrictions in parts of its controlled Kashmir on Tuesday and deployed thousands of troops to stop anti-India demonstrations after the death of two youths. Protesters said Fayaz Ahmad Wani and Muzaffar Ahmad Bhat were killed when police took action to stop anti-India demonstrations. (Photo: Umar Ganie/Reuters) Father of the deceased, Muzzafar Ahmad Bhat, being kicked and stomped upon by Indian army. Original title: “Indian CRPF dogs lynching the father of Muzaffar Ahmad…” (Photo: Uncredited, but perhaps Umar Ganie/Reuters)Original title: A Kashmiri man tried to protect the body of a relative, Muzaffar Ahmad Bhat, after the police stopped the funeral procession for Mr. Bhat in Srinagar, in Indian-administered Kashmir. The Indian police fired at hundreds of stone throwing protesters in Kashmir on Tuesday, killing three citizens.” (Photo: Umar Ganie/Reuters)

The firing ordered by the British Brigadier-General Reginald Dyer at an unarmed crowd in Jallianwala Bagh, Amritsar, on April 13, 1919, was arguably the defining moment of the independence movement in India.[5] The only question I have of Vij is, how will we decide which “Jallianwala Bagh moment” will be the defining one for Kashmir: the Sopore Massacre of 1993 or the Gau Kadal Massacre of January 1990, the mass rapes in Kunan Poshpora in 1991 or the Bijbehara Massacre of 1993? Moreover, who are we to say that any of those thousands of moments when a mother lost her precious child, a brother his sibling, a child her parent, in this “demon-crazy” [6] dance of death is not the defining “Jallianwala Bagh” moment for the Independence movement in Kashmir? Such a choice is made difficult by the sheer length of this grotesque list, yet ironically a simpler choice never made available to the Kashmiris is one that was repeatedly promised to them by the United Nations and by the first Prime Minister of India, Pandit Nehru: plebiscites for self-determination.[7] The current slogans make it clear that the Kashmiris want neither India, nor Pakistan, but independence — Azadi. “The Revolution might not be televised” but it is on cyberspace and being written by blood.!انقلاب زندہ باد

Under this Act [AFSPA], all security forces are given unrestricted and unaccounted power to carry out their operations, once an area is declared disturbed. Even a non-commissioned officer is granted the right to shoot to kill based on mere suspicion that it is necessary to do so in order to “maintain the public order.”

[2] Such “fake encounters” are not rare, “bad-apple” incidents but an integral part of the systemic, institutionalized methods of disciplining directed from the topmost levels of Indian military, as shown in the recent exposé of the “Ketchup Colonel.” Posted in the North East in 2003, Colonel Harvinder Singh Kohli, of the Indian Army, a rare man of conscience, was loathe to increase the statistics of actual “kills” for his regiment, and enacted a fake “fake encounter” — replete with a photo-shoot and ketchup “blood” on posing men — to get around following his boss’s orders “to bump off in an encounter five [Assamese] militants” already in his custody. Not knowing the truth, these “superiors” then “cajoled Kohli to recommend gallantry awards for his men” but things fell through when someone filed an anonymous allegation. Kohli was court-martialled following an inquiry, and then unceremoniously dismissed.

Initially misled by some secret negotiations that lured him to plead guilty, Kohli finally revealed that his superior, Brigadier S. S. Rao, had ordered the staging of a fake encounter with real deaths, perfectly within “the knowledge of the brigadier’s boss — Major General Ravinder Singh, general officer commanding.” As evidence Kohli further “submitted taped transcripts of the conversation that he [had] had with the brigadier.” The brigadier who ordered the unconstitutional killings was let off with forfeiture of five years of seniority and a severe reprimand. In a revealing though unsurprising move, Kohli — the one who bravely refused to carry out the extrajudicial killing — was “given no relief.”

[3] For example — as in most other media coverage — Lydia Polgreen, in her pathetically ill-informed article of July 11, 2010, in The New York Times, gives no account of the true genealogy of the protests this year: the discovery of yet another “false encounter” to add to a long history of the same. It describes the death of a 17-year-old by “a tear gas canister fired from close range” — notice: no subject in the first paragraph! — but never asks why? Why were the Indian security forces or Kashmiri Police deploying tear gas in the first place, is a question that sadly, yet predictably, never crosses her mind!

[4] Anyone reminded of the tragic killing of Neda Soltani in Tehran last year and the instant celebrity status accorded to her by the Western media? But then again, Iran is not India, and Ahmedinejad is not Manmohan Singh. Most importantly, the strategic interests of capital and empire accrue differently in the two countries. Different populations need “regime change” at different times.

[5] The connection of Kashmir and Kashmiris to Jallianwala Bagh is very intimate. Many who died at the Bagh (garden) that day were Kashmiri Muslims who had migrated south due to persecution from the occupying regimes (See public records for the former and Mridu Rai’s Hindu Rulers, Muslim Subjects for more on the latter). The protests that culminated on April 13, 1919 at Jallianwala Bagh were spurred by demonstrations against the imprisonment of my maternal granduncle, Dr. Saifuddin Kitchlew (a Kashmiri Muslim, born in Amritsar) and his colleague Satyapal who had been protesting the Rowlatt Act. In fact the Bagh gathering was symbolically presided over by Dr. Kitchlew’s portrait on the dais. One such portrait still hangs at the martyr’s gallery in Jallianwala Bagh.

[6] “Demon-crazy” is a pun thrown at India, supposedly the “world’s largest democracy” by protesting Kashmiris; it was picked up by Arundhati Roy in her lucid writings on the issue.

[7] To those who indignantly and piously point to the high turnout in the Kashmir elections, organized by India in 2008 — some known Indian “progressive” figures in their midst — I would like to say the following: By taking the election turnout as a de-facto referendum of Kashmiris’ consent to be a part of India, they are actually unwittingly reinforcing the exhortations of those Kashmiri leaders who want Azadi. These leaders have historically pleaded the public to not vote, because such a vote would be misconstrued (as a vote “for India”: the claim in question), and not recognized as a legitimate desire to direct the quotidian needs of schools and roads, electricity and industry. Moreover, here’s a thought experiment wittily proposed by Sanjay Kak who made the excellent documentary film, Jashn-e Azadi (2008), on the situation in Kashmir:

I wonder if others have noticed the tremendous boost that the presence of soldiers can give to democracy in remote areas. Gurez in north Kashmir reported 73.59% in the first phase (admittedly down from the 76% in the 2002 elections). It has a population of 30,000 and a registered voter base of 15,000. It also has, for strategic reasons, 60,000 soldiers of the Indian Army permanently stationed there. That’s what – 4 soldiers per voter?

Could that be a solution to perk up the low voter turnout in Delhi (40%)…? I wonder if the Election Commission manuals have anything on that?

Update, Feb 19, 2011:

The video “Stones in my Hand,” which I had originally posted, was removed by YouTube because it “violated” Youtube’s policy “on shocking and disgusting content.” Please click on the “Play” button to confirm. I completely concur — Indian State’s behavior has indeed been “shocking and disgusting.” What escaped YouTube’s notice was that this was all documentary footage, just like the footage that came out of Tunisia and Egypt, and is now coming out of Bahrain, Libya, Iran, Yemen et al.

“Freedom’s terrible thirst” makes us walk a million miles of discourse to a vantage point of understanding. In this piece Huma proves that she is at a very advanced stage of that journey. Thanks Huma, for the pain, for the love, for the hope, and most importantly, for illuminating the path for others.

Thanks Huma, I wish, under the circumstances, there is no way out except giving Kashmiris the right to decide their fate through a plebiscite pledged by India under UNSC resolutions. Since Kashmir is the key to peace and stability in the region there should be little doubt that unless the conflict is resolved in line with the wishes of the people, tension and turmoil will reign supreme in South Asia.

Yes, agreed, exactly, “FREEDOM” and “INDEPENDENCE” of Kashmir is the need of the hour. The state of Human Rights violations in the Indian Occupied Kashmir can be imagined from the factual reports, which says that, there have been 93,274 deaths of the innocent Kashmiri from 1989 to June 30, 2010. Besides this alarming figure of open killings by its security forces, there have been 6,969 custodial killings, 117,345 arrests, destruction, and razing of 105,861 houses and other physical structures in the use of the community as a whole. The brutal security forces have orphaned over 107, 351 children, widowed 22,728 women and gang raped 9,920 women and young girls. In June 2010 only, there have been over 40 deaths including four children besides, torturing and injuring 572 people. The brutal Indian security forces molested eight women during this one month. By committing this much human rights violations so far, India is trumpeting its success in the Kashmir, which indeed, is the real cause of fresh uprisings.

We have to watch and see how long India can conceal herself from numerous UNO “Resolutions about Kashmir: FREEDOM-??????